Power Play: Greg LaVoi’s Storied Career in Fashion Design

By M. Sharpe

lavoibwFrom Reba McEntire and Bob Mackie to The Closer‘s Brenda Leigh Johnson and his own clothing line, Greg LaVoi has spent his career telling women’s stories through the clothes they wear. Whether with sequins, spandex, floral prints, or Armani suits, in LaVoi’s hands, clothing isn’t merely a mode of expression; instead, it lets us see how women in power actually look. Now, as Major Crimes enters its second season, LaVoi continues to chart the evolving female leadership of the LAPD, as we watch Captain Sharon Raydor’s life develop both within and outside the squadroom.

Although it might not seem a likely place to develop a passion for costume design, LaVoi was surrounded by fashion while growing up in Colorado; his father owned a clothing store and his mother was a fashionista. This flair for the dramatic first led LaVoi into the theater. But, after being told he wasn’t leading man material, LaVoi gave up on his dreams of acting. As disappointing as that was, it proved to be an auspicious event, because, as LaVoi explains,” I got upset and went to the other side of the stage, and that was costumes, because I had always loved fashion, and I would sketch outfits all the time.” In the mid-seventies, with Sonny and Cher and The Carol Burnett Show at the height of their popularity, LaVoi fell in love with the strong, flamboyant designs of Bob Mackie. Rather than attending fashion school in New York, he headed west, enrolling in Los Angeles’s Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising. Continue reading

Tom Berenger Reunites with Mary McDonnell on ‘Major Crimes’


2.05 mary tom berengerIn a new interview  with Zap2it, Tom Berenger talks about his 3-episode stint on Major Crimes, and how coming to the show was a bit of a reunion for him.

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“I know three people on the show, so it’s a little bit of a reunion,” the friendly Berenger tells Zap2it. “I did a comedy in Spain with G.W. Bailey (‘Rustlers’ Rhapsody’), and Raymond Cruz worked with me on [the movie] ‘The Substitute.’

 

 ”And then Mary McDonnell and I did a fabulous play back east with Kevin Spacey (‘National Anthems’), two acts and three characters, and it was sold out … so this was like old home week. They’re a really nice bunch over there, very relaxed and very happy, and that’s always good.”

Berenger and McDonnell both have had Kevin Costner as a co-star, he in “Hatfields & McCoys” (for which Costner also won an Emmy) and she in “Dances With Wolves,” which made her an Oscar nominee. They didn’t really swap Costner stories on the “Major Crimes” set, according to Berenger, who enjoyed applying their shared stage past to their latest stint together.

“We played a husband and wife back then, and now here I am playing her husband again! We kind of joked that we already had the chemistry going, and it was just really easy. You could walk right into it.”

Though he considers his new alter ego “a little comic relief” for the police procedural “Major Crimes” is, Berenger hastens to add his character isn’t totally light.

“He has a drinking problem,” Berenger says. “That’s part of the subtext, and though he got over that, he still gambles a little bit. And he likes it, card games and all that. Maybe it was worse when he was drinking.

“I’m kind of basing it on a friend of mine,” notes Berenger. “He didn’t have a drinking or gambling problem growing up, but the subplot just reminds me of him. And also of ‘Mad Men,’ which I’m a big fan of. I talk to my daughter about it, and it’s like we’re talking about real people when we talk about the characters.”

Tom Berenger Heads to ‘Major Crimes’


2.05-jackson raydor rusty2 lrSmashingInterviews spoke to Tom Berenger about his role on Major Crimes as Captain Raydor’s estranged husband, and the possibility of his character returning to the show in the future.

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Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): You play Capt. Sharon Raydor’s (Mary McDonnell) estranged husband who has a drinking and gambling problem, is that correct?

Tom Berenger: He had a drinking problem. He got over that. I would probably call it a degenerate gambler, but how bad that really is isn’t apparent to me yet although my character is teaching Rusty (Graham Patrick Martin) card tricks and Texas Hold ‘Em.

Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): He is not a good influence on the boy.

Tom Berenger: Right, and he just came back from Las Vegas where he was living, so that’s a little scary that he’s there with a gambling problem (laughs).

Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): I assume with only a three-episode arc, there will be some friction between your character and Capt. Raydor?

Tom Berenger: There already has been as per the third episode, and that was totally on a professional level, not personal. He gets on the list for court appointed attorneys and gets a client that the police and, of course, the prosecutor are trying to corner. I don’t want to give it away, but there’s some nefarious stuff going on there on both sides, my part as an attorney and also on her part as well, so it gets pretty intense there. The first two episodes were more comic relief.

Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): Will your character return?

Tom Berenger: They left it open so whatever the writers and producers want to do with that. I’d come back because I had a good time. I enjoyed it. I like the cast and crew, the producers and writers, the whole bunch. It was nice. It’s not easy doing shows like that day in and day out, but I thought everybody was just fabulous.

Read the entire interview here.

 

Mary McDonnell Steps Up in ‘Major’ Role


2013 TNT/TBS Upfront - Green RoomIn a new interview with the Miami Herald, Mary McDonnell discusses season 2 of Major Crimes, her reunion with Tom Berenger on the show, and her “ridiculously funny” cast.

How is it playing Sharon Raydor since 2009? Still fresh?

I am living, breathing her. There isn’t that searching for identity and wondering how it’s going to fall together. We’re done. Hello! It’s now, ‘Where do we want to take her?’ We are truly in some wonderful storytelling mode right now. There are some dangerous moments, for sure. I think fans are going to have a ball.

How is season two going?

I’ve been so happy with it so far; the dilemmas and interesting texture and new characters and all kind of things. A new district attorney [ My Name is Earl’s Nadine Velazquez] has come to visit the squad. On one hand, it’s extraordinary to have young female talent to come and help with a major case. On the other hand, she is presenting problems. It’s very exciting the way she interacts with the whole group and what she stimulates.

Any love interests for Sharon?

Oh, this [plotline] has been very fun: The introduction of Sharon’s estranged, but not divorced, husband in the form of Tom Berenger. He’s an amazing actor, actually. It’s a delight to work with him. Tom just jumped on board and dove right in. There wasn’t one bit of hesitation. We have some history, so we have wonderful chemistry. He and I did a play together with Kevin Spacey in London [2005’s National Anthems] when we were husband and wife. We were trying to do a movie together in the ’90s, Last of the Dogmen, but I had to back out of the idea because I was pregnant and couldn’t risk it as we were going to be shooting in the jungle. Barbara Hershey ended up in the role.

You tackle some serious subject matter on this show. What is the on-set chemistry like?

I’m telling you, it’s not a reach. OK, you gotta do your job, whatever it is. But boy, when a lot of the history is out of the way and you immediately trust each other enough to risk and it really clicks, it’s so much different than when it doesn’t! It’s a ridiculously funny cast. Doing table reads is like being with your siblings at Thanksgiving dinner. If we could, there would be a food fight every week, and people would be laughing. We just don’t have time. That’s the level at which there is the potential at any moment for high hilarity to break out.

You look beyond amazing. What are you doing? Or not doing?

Well, if I could give you my trade secrets, I would. But I don’t have any big ones. Genes, maybe. I feel very fortunate. I swim almost every day. I was an athlete as a child. I also have to honor the fact that the people in the crew honor me in what they do with me. I don’t want that to go unacknowledged. I mean, they help a woman, they help female characters look good.

Read the entire article here

With James Duff at the Helm, Major Crimes Forges Its Own Identity

By M. Sharpe

Duff TC Finale

Major Crimes Creator/Executive Producer James Duff.
Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images

As the eve of the Season 2 premiere of Major Crimes approaches, Series Creator and Executive Producer James Duff can’t help but reminisce about the difference between when The Closer first premiered on TNT in 2005, and last year, when Major Crimes debuted directly after its series finale. “It’s a very different environment than when The Closer first started. Because there were only two shows on the air that season, and TNT was just beginning its thrust to original content. And now a new season has arrived and they have several one hour dramas on the air- almost a full network schedule.” Of promoting the series premiere of Major Crimes last year, he says it was problematic because, as the spin-off to The Closer, it relied on launching directly after that show’s final episode- and to say almost anything about the new show would give away the details of how The Closer would end. “It was a marketing nightmare, but we managed.”

They did more than just manage. Major Crimes set a new record as basic cable’s most-watched series launch ever and averaged 7 million viewers in its freshman season. Returning tonight for its second season, Duff is excited about the new storytelling opportunities that are being presented in Major Crimes, and while comparisons to The Closer are inevitable, he says that Major Crimes has truly developed into its own unique franchise. Continue reading